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Nov 28, 2012
11/12
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the kennedy team, which came in to washington with great hopes called him -- [inaudible] now i love boston, and i went to school up there and high school there's a lot of smart people thereupon. i resented the fact that people in the north think that people in texas are deserving of terms like -- i don't know about you it kind of upsets me. because we do have people that, you know, are a little, you know, capable of doings things including the then president of the united states lyndon johnson. in a six week period kept the kennedy team because it was essential to be able to keep the momentum going on the agenda that stalled for three years, effectively. he kept the kennedy team which showed the leadership skills of humility. he the leadership skill of dogged determination to create and he the skills of creating a strategy. he implement ploymented in a six-week period a 25% across the board cut in income tabses. the idea was to cut taxes to raise revenue to going fund the great society programs. he went to the senate, which was oppose to the ultimately goal of, you know, significance civil
the kennedy team, which came in to washington with great hopes called him -- [inaudible] now i love boston, and i went to school up there and high school there's a lot of smart people thereupon. i resented the fact that people in the north think that people in texas are deserving of terms like -- i don't know about you it kind of upsets me. because we do have people that, you know, are a little, you know, capable of doings things including the then president of the united states lyndon johnson....
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Aug 15, 2012
08/12
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yet it's okay for the mayor of boston and chicago. wow, it's not okay. like i said this is not just about the economy, the selection. they're huge, cultural, fundamental things at stake in this election. you know how the democratic party, not saying they are for redefining the basic institution of our society. he put on the street here in washington d.c. and you'll find a place called the archives volumes and volumes -- a talk about this in my book, studies called environmental impact statement. if you want to do something to change the environment, like building a bridge across a swamp, you've got to spend millions of dollars and prove to the federal government do what you're going to do is not disturb the ecology with the environment that you are affected by the new structure. jack, we are now in this brave new world fundamentally changing the basic family. and what evidence have you heard about why this is a good thing for society other than apology. equality is a good thing. but it all depends. if the government has done the business of equality to r
yet it's okay for the mayor of boston and chicago. wow, it's not okay. like i said this is not just about the economy, the selection. they're huge, cultural, fundamental things at stake in this election. you know how the democratic party, not saying they are for redefining the basic institution of our society. he put on the street here in washington d.c. and you'll find a place called the archives volumes and volumes -- a talk about this in my book, studies called environmental impact...
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Jan 17, 2012
01/12
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boston, july 21, 1776. last thursday, after hearing a very good sermon, i went with the multitude into king street, to hear the proclamation for independence read and proclaimed. the troops appeared under arms and all the inhabitantses assembled there. when colonel craft read from the balcony of the state house the proclaimation, great attention was given to every word. as soon as he ended, the cry from the balcony was, god save our american states, and then three cheers which rended the air. the bells rang. the privateers fired the forts and batteries. the cannon were discharged. the platoons followed and every face appeared joyful. ... return to the continental congress. his absence in the spring and summer of 1777 was particularly difficult that every deal was pregnant again with her sixth child. >> philadelphia, march 16, 1777. the spurring advances very rapidly and all nature will soon be closed and her robes. the green grass which begins to show itself here and they're revives in my longing imaginatio
boston, july 21, 1776. last thursday, after hearing a very good sermon, i went with the multitude into king street, to hear the proclamation for independence read and proclaimed. the troops appeared under arms and all the inhabitantses assembled there. when colonel craft read from the balcony of the state house the proclaimation, great attention was given to every word. as soon as he ended, the cry from the balcony was, god save our american states, and then three cheers which rended the air....
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Oct 2, 2012
10/12
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boston herald reporter will be our guest. we will be joined by a host of reliable sources and the host of the daily download. we will discuss the recent report of how high school students are doing on the sats. our guests is vice president james montoya. "washington journal" is live on c-span everyday at 7:00 a.m. eastern. on tuesday, the new america foundation looks at the role of money in the 2012 elections. panelists include the former sec chairman and live coverage starts at 12:15 p.m. eastern on c-span. >> you are watching c-span2 at politics and public affairs, featuring live coverage of the u.s. senate. on weeknights, watch public-policy events and the latest nonfiction authors and books on booktv. you can see past programs and get our schedules at her website and you can join in the conversation on social media sites. >> president obama held a campaign event on sunday night. the campaign was updated due to recent events in the middle east. this is 30 minutes. ♪ ♪ >> hello, hello. [cheers] [applause] >> good weathe
boston herald reporter will be our guest. we will be joined by a host of reliable sources and the host of the daily download. we will discuss the recent report of how high school students are doing on the sats. our guests is vice president james montoya. "washington journal" is live on c-span everyday at 7:00 a.m. eastern. on tuesday, the new america foundation looks at the role of money in the 2012 elections. panelists include the former sec chairman and live coverage starts at 12:15...
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Nov 2, 2012
11/12
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capture, realized she could get a bounty for scalps, went back on the scalp them and made her way to boston where she was a. the first statute to an american woman, a permit statue shutter with a hatchet in one hand and scalps in the other. >> hurricanes and he is now believed to be one of the costliest natural disasters with insured losses estimated to be as much as $20 billion. we discussed the national flood insurance program and how the insurance companies are responding to sandy with an industry representative. this is a half-hour. postcode let me introduce you to john prible, vice president of the independent insurance agents and brokers of america. our topic is the national insurance program. mr. purple, this article was in "the wall street journal" yesterday ensures market bubble tab. what's the responsibility when it comes to recovering from sandy? >> guest: sure, that article and a hand like really captures exactly what is going on. so when a typical insurance event for a hurricane, there's going to be damage caused by wind, wind storm damage, fallen trees. you see in the news med
capture, realized she could get a bounty for scalps, went back on the scalp them and made her way to boston where she was a. the first statute to an american woman, a permit statue shutter with a hatchet in one hand and scalps in the other. >> hurricanes and he is now believed to be one of the costliest natural disasters with insured losses estimated to be as much as $20 billion. we discussed the national flood insurance program and how the insurance companies are responding to sandy with...
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Dec 4, 2012
12/12
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transportation systems in new york, philadelphia, boston and washington d.c. shut down and over 12,000 commercial flights were halted. communities up and down the coast are battered. federal government has a responsibility to help in the recovery effort. initial estimates from new york and new jersey alone of disaster assistance total more than $70 billion, a staggering number. sandy demonstrates clearly why it is so important to move forward with our bill. i've been working with senator vitter will become the new ranking and senator and all of my colleagues to make sure we can move forward an author is critical flood control infrastructure right now because we now have confused and working together is how we associate the core authoress to move forward. there is a new title in our draft work of legislation. we called extreme weather disaster mitigation, which will help us better prepared than reduce risk. whether those risks are in the northeast in louisiana or inland states or the west coast, they are everywhere. more frequent stream weather events happened
transportation systems in new york, philadelphia, boston and washington d.c. shut down and over 12,000 commercial flights were halted. communities up and down the coast are battered. federal government has a responsibility to help in the recovery effort. initial estimates from new york and new jersey alone of disaster assistance total more than $70 billion, a staggering number. sandy demonstrates clearly why it is so important to move forward with our bill. i've been working with senator vitter...
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Sep 8, 2012
09/12
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the boston police strike, the seattle general strike. you think the world is about ready to blow up after the war. and the unemployment rate, the inflation rate, are terrific. we would easily be satisfied with what's going on now rather than have that. >> host: in 1919, 1920, was it a given or general thought that whoever won the republican primary would win the presidency? >> guest: yes, i think so. you'd have to be dreaming to think as the year went on that the democrats could pull it off and there is this massive, massive landslide. so, if it's not theodore roosevelt -- now, theodore roosevelt -- the republican party splits wide open 1912. that's how woodrow wilson gets in. he had 41-43% of the popular vote that year. i think he gets less of a percentage of the popular vote in 1912 then william jennings bryan does in getting killed in 1908 or something like that. or i guess mckin lee. one of those years. really a low turnout. but the party heals itself in 1916, comes damn close to winning. >> host: tr. >> guest: tr is a republican aga
the boston police strike, the seattle general strike. you think the world is about ready to blow up after the war. and the unemployment rate, the inflation rate, are terrific. we would easily be satisfied with what's going on now rather than have that. >> host: in 1919, 1920, was it a given or general thought that whoever won the republican primary would win the presidency? >> guest: yes, i think so. you'd have to be dreaming to think as the year went on that the democrats could...
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Aug 16, 2012
08/12
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he was known probably as breaking the boston police strike and ronald reagan quoted him when he broke the air traffic control union in 1981. but what is not known about coolidge is that he once said this about industry. we must humanize industry or the system will break down. he was also when he was in the state legislature president of the state senate he was asked to lead a committee to broker and to mediate the strike and he did so and both sides agreed to the proposal that he championed as the chairman of the committee which was essentially a significant wage increase for the workers. he was extremely pro-civil rights both for catholic, jewish and african-americans. all of them of course were persecuted at that time. that was a time in america when the kkk was very powerful and most of us here in yankee land think the ku klux klan was designed as an organization to persecute african-americans. the truth was the kkk was first invented in the midwest to persecute catholics and then jewish and african-americans and calvin coolidge, and they also played a big significant role in polit
he was known probably as breaking the boston police strike and ronald reagan quoted him when he broke the air traffic control union in 1981. but what is not known about coolidge is that he once said this about industry. we must humanize industry or the system will break down. he was also when he was in the state legislature president of the state senate he was asked to lead a committee to broker and to mediate the strike and he did so and both sides agreed to the proposal that he championed as...
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Apr 6, 2012
04/12
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to cut off the boston harbor. they thought the locals up there, such of the irish were bitter about things, he's doing this because the old man just won the merchandise mart in chicago. he showing for the old man. so he began in fact i would ted sorensen is to be granted a magazine article at times in which they have acted against local constituents even show national courage. that is when it started and evolved down into a book. he didn't write it. if you listen to what sorensen wrote before he died in what he told me, he is only 28-year-old kid. kennedy knew of the history. it is fair to say kennedy produced the book. he had all the history, read the books, scribbled some notes, figured it out. he wasn't going to sit there month after month and drafted. it went back and looked to kennedy's letters. they're beautifully dictated, butters to his girlfriend, typed pages, beautifully written letters without any problems. beautiful grammar. i'd love to talk about inge come at a deadbeat dad. his girlfriends were all g
to cut off the boston harbor. they thought the locals up there, such of the irish were bitter about things, he's doing this because the old man just won the merchandise mart in chicago. he showing for the old man. so he began in fact i would ted sorensen is to be granted a magazine article at times in which they have acted against local constituents even show national courage. that is when it started and evolved down into a book. he didn't write it. if you listen to what sorensen wrote before...
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Dec 28, 2012
12/12
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just for the bookends the second 2004 in 1889 this is going up to boston to harvard law school. so barack obama is finally going to make an appearance in your book. it's about halfway through the book. >> guest: no, it's not halfway. it's 164 pages into a 587 page book. >> host: so they get to hawaii. how did his parents meet? >> guest: welcome his mother was 17 years old. >> host: i apologize, one step back. how did he get to hawaii? >> guest: her father stan dunham who say furniture sales and in mercer island or seattle, washington. they lived right next to seattle this other. he was always looking for the next thing. he moved from kansas to california, several time to seattle to why. so she came along with the family but she graduated an excellent public school in seattle. she was the only child. her name is stanley ann. i can take a story some other time. so she's there as a freshman. it's been there since 1959. also an undergraduate, even though much older, but that they do sign up for beginning russian class. this was during in schools all over this story considered the mo
just for the bookends the second 2004 in 1889 this is going up to boston to harvard law school. so barack obama is finally going to make an appearance in your book. it's about halfway through the book. >> guest: no, it's not halfway. it's 164 pages into a 587 page book. >> host: so they get to hawaii. how did his parents meet? >> guest: welcome his mother was 17 years old. >> host: i apologize, one step back. how did he get to hawaii? >> guest: her father stan...
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Jun 2, 2012
06/12
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washes windows in new york city skyscrapers are public housing or her groundskeeper at fenway park in boston. and although stories and i've done over 300 shows. all of those stories are stories about the dignity of work and about the fulfillment won han in doing something well, whatever that is. and so, i wanted to write about that. chapter five is called celebrating selflessness, which is as i said it's got to be vegan diet foundation for anything else we do. and what kind of stories? well, sorry the guy guy who shined shoes at the children's hospital for 46 years and he put a portion of that tape in the fund to pay for the purchase health care in the day i interviewed him, he put over $100,000 in to that fund to the goodness of the american people. and then there's the lady outside of chicago. she had a great chicago accent is important in the radio. and she has an 11-year-old son who had cancer. and she's in the hospital and got a lot of letters in the heart but of. and then when he came home, he got the letters. and he asked his mother one day, mom, did not sin sending me letters because
washes windows in new york city skyscrapers are public housing or her groundskeeper at fenway park in boston. and although stories and i've done over 300 shows. all of those stories are stories about the dignity of work and about the fulfillment won han in doing something well, whatever that is. and so, i wanted to write about that. chapter five is called celebrating selflessness, which is as i said it's got to be vegan diet foundation for anything else we do. and what kind of stories? well,...
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Aug 18, 2012
08/12
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so we have been working with david kennedy out of the boston area cease-fire. we have begun to the line every level of law enforcement to target the ten percenters, those who are 10 percent of the people who are committing 90 percent of the violent acts in fresno. really, probably, many of the have heard this, but the signature feature of this particular program is the call-in where you invitees ten percenters to come in, usually held at churches and they hear from law enforcement at the local, state, federal level, but they also hear from former gang members, reformed gang members, trauma nurse or in the are dark and a spectrum of people who all send the same message which is violence must not. and it, the combined message, you have to stop. you know you will be locked away for many, many years. if you choose to stop there are a range of resources available to get you out of the lifestyle you're in now. after the law enforcement panel there is the record of service providers to come in and be with the individuals and connect them with services in an attempt to
so we have been working with david kennedy out of the boston area cease-fire. we have begun to the line every level of law enforcement to target the ten percenters, those who are 10 percent of the people who are committing 90 percent of the violent acts in fresno. really, probably, many of the have heard this, but the signature feature of this particular program is the call-in where you invitees ten percenters to come in, usually held at churches and they hear from law enforcement at the local,...
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Sep 21, 2012
09/12
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courtesy of wbz-tv in boston, this is an hour. >> welcome to the marc lamont hill debate. welcome to our listeners on wbz news 1030, online at boston.com and across the nation on c-span and a special hello to our spanish-speaking viewers computer vision, brain is not shakespeare bochum also to the candidates. they are the incumbent scott brown, former state senator in january 2010. and the challenger, elizabeth warren of cambridge, professor at harvard law school, who is making her first run for elected office. before we begin, a brief for data format. all us questions for the debate is that voters who submit them to cbs boston.com. each candidate will have 90 seconds to answer the same question so you can compare answers side-by-side. they will take turns going first. and they've each had their turn, will begin in no pain. every bottle in debate, during which the candidates are free to question address each other directly. the only hard and fast rules is not talking over each other. no filibustering and obey your moderator always. and with that, let's begin the prior arra
courtesy of wbz-tv in boston, this is an hour. >> welcome to the marc lamont hill debate. welcome to our listeners on wbz news 1030, online at boston.com and across the nation on c-span and a special hello to our spanish-speaking viewers computer vision, brain is not shakespeare bochum also to the candidates. they are the incumbent scott brown, former state senator in january 2010. and the challenger, elizabeth warren of cambridge, professor at harvard law school, who is making her first...
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Apr 13, 2012
04/12
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and then for some years after that, i was the director of the boston university washington center here with a teaching journalism students and then left to do this book. >> host: it says you're with the wilson center. >> guest: i refer -- was the little people that is. >> guest: the woodrow wilson center is created as a living tribute to woodrow wilson who was the only ph.d. president that we have ever had. he was president of princeton university before he was elected president, and my dog my chocolate lab was named willson in honor of him and it is a center where the scholars in the country and international scholars can come in and do research and think about various issues affecting the u.s. future in the global issues. >> host: are you doing much traveling with the book? >> guest: i am. i'm going to be in ohio before this year's for super tuesday week speaking at ohio state and i'm very excited about that. i'm going to be making a trip to new england at the end of march, so that will be after this errors. i'm going to be speaking at a few colleges in new hampshire and i'm going to
and then for some years after that, i was the director of the boston university washington center here with a teaching journalism students and then left to do this book. >> host: it says you're with the wilson center. >> guest: i refer -- was the little people that is. >> guest: the woodrow wilson center is created as a living tribute to woodrow wilson who was the only ph.d. president that we have ever had. he was president of princeton university before he was elected...
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Feb 2, 2012
02/12
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there was a real job, no question about it to the he received his undergraduate degree from boston college. welcome to you both. before i recognize each of you to provide your testimony, let me once again briefly explain our lighting system. you will each have five minutes to present your testimony. if you go over like will not be gaveling you down if i start to get nervous appear you'll hear a gentle tapping. when you began to light in front of you will turn green and when one is left the light will turn yellow and when your time is expired the light will turn red. after everyone testified, we hear members will each have five minutes to have the chance to ask questions and have them answered from the panel. so at this time, we will start with governor snyder. governor, you are recognized. >> thank you. it's an honor to be here for the invitation and i want to thank the representative for his fine representation of the state along with representative kildee. i'm here to talk up the topic that's most important in the state and i appreciate the opportunity to share that with you which is mor
there was a real job, no question about it to the he received his undergraduate degree from boston college. welcome to you both. before i recognize each of you to provide your testimony, let me once again briefly explain our lighting system. you will each have five minutes to present your testimony. if you go over like will not be gaveling you down if i start to get nervous appear you'll hear a gentle tapping. when you began to light in front of you will turn green and when one is left the...
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141
May 25, 2012
05/12
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if you're a license clerk in the city of boston they don't want to visualize this is, you'd rather someone else at the desk to do it, the couple can get their license, mr. conscience is protected. that is unacceptable. so this piece of legislation also would stymied in stalled because of the tensions. the last example i want to give more recently is what happened with regard to not yet enact it, but one of the priorities of the civil rights community generally is called the employment nondiscrimination act, which would be an employment discrimination in the private sector and basis of orientation. before 2006, when that legislation was introduced year after year, it contained a very clear and simple exemption for religious and lawyers. it literally said the nonemployee to religious employers. post-2006, the congressional elections had changed and again there was an emergence of greater political power in the part of the proponents of this kind of legislation. they took the one sending exemption and rewrote it into three paragraphs. now you don't need to be a lawyer or lobbyists to note tha
if you're a license clerk in the city of boston they don't want to visualize this is, you'd rather someone else at the desk to do it, the couple can get their license, mr. conscience is protected. that is unacceptable. so this piece of legislation also would stymied in stalled because of the tensions. the last example i want to give more recently is what happened with regard to not yet enact it, but one of the priorities of the civil rights community generally is called the employment...
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144
Jul 31, 2012
07/12
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my residency was for three years in boston. then it was time to pay off my scholarship. so the only way i was able to afford harvard was to have a scholarship, which will pay for medical school, and then you have to pay back four years working in the indian health service. i did not go back to south dakota because her family is kind of well-known and i just didn't want to be ramon or cecilia's daughter. when i was just for starting out to be a doctor. i ended up going to arizona. i worked for the apache tribe, but in three years, i worked with the healing river indian reservation. [applause] all right. i was there for about a year. i really enjoyed being a doctor, working in indian communities, taking care of indian traditions. i really felt like i needed to do more. the problem with the indian health service is that we don't have a lot of money to pay for all the health care. our budget, even though it is $4.3 billion, it is still not enough we only have $4.3 billion. that is why it is hard to get your referrals taken care of. rather than being a doctor in the clinic, i
my residency was for three years in boston. then it was time to pay off my scholarship. so the only way i was able to afford harvard was to have a scholarship, which will pay for medical school, and then you have to pay back four years working in the indian health service. i did not go back to south dakota because her family is kind of well-known and i just didn't want to be ramon or cecilia's daughter. when i was just for starting out to be a doctor. i ended up going to arizona. i worked for...
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108
Feb 24, 2012
02/12
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eye 108
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come on life will all the way down from boston. good evening. good evening. that's what i'm talking about. i can't do that in boston that is a strong appeal for me. it's been a big day. i saw sanja today. i'm doing in a pbs series finding your roots that appears in late march, and i've always admired him. isn't he a good guy? [applause] she's such a warm guy. with one of the most moving experiences that i have had doing all of my genealogy and genetic series so i'm psyched about that and want to tell you state-owned late march and you will check out his family history. but tonight i want to tell you about my new book called "life of on these shores," and subtitled looking at african-american history 1500-2008. and it consists of 789 illustrations and about 237 entries. it's dedicated in memory of my father. my father died last christmas. henry louis gates jr., and sorry, henry louis gates, senior. i am the jr and i am still here. [laughter] daddy loved history. and he and i -- but he also loved sports and had one older brother and it was just the two of us an
come on life will all the way down from boston. good evening. good evening. that's what i'm talking about. i can't do that in boston that is a strong appeal for me. it's been a big day. i saw sanja today. i'm doing in a pbs series finding your roots that appears in late march, and i've always admired him. isn't he a good guy? [applause] she's such a warm guy. with one of the most moving experiences that i have had doing all of my genealogy and genetic series so i'm psyched about that and want...
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187
Jul 25, 2012
07/12
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during this critical time, i was beginning my tenure as the chief medical resident at the boston city hospital. i will never forget the patient is that we lost and the way they suffered. since then, more than 640,000 americans have lost their lives to aids. and today an estimated 1.1 million people are living with hiv in the united states. one in five is unaware of his or her infection. while a u.s. infant's remains stable in recent years, with approximately 50,000 new infections annually, this figure is unacceptably high. we also know that in the united states the burden of hiv is not shared equally by population or by region. populations most affected include men who have sex with men of all races, in particular african-american and latino men, women of color and transgender women, people who use drugs, and young people the especially young black men who have sex with men. region's most affected include urban areas, the northeast and the south. none of this is acceptable. so many in our country have contributed to building a system of protection that by providing linkages to ongoing
during this critical time, i was beginning my tenure as the chief medical resident at the boston city hospital. i will never forget the patient is that we lost and the way they suffered. since then, more than 640,000 americans have lost their lives to aids. and today an estimated 1.1 million people are living with hiv in the united states. one in five is unaware of his or her infection. while a u.s. infant's remains stable in recent years, with approximately 50,000 new infections annually, this...
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Aug 22, 2012
08/12
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. >> later in the book, the real romney, "boston globe" investigator michael crane-ish blue billick, michigan truth his years at bain capital. part of our booktv weekend on c-span 2. >> author and human rights activists, kati marton is joined by 2011 peace prize winner, said seven and a dina powell come in the global head of corporate engagement from goldman sachs. posted by the hamptons institute and the roosevelt institute, this is an hour and 15 minutes. >> the executive to her and tracey marshall who puts together the production of these wonderful weekend programs. i am alan chesler, senior fellow at the roosevelt institute, part organization in this enterprise and we are now having the dirt under programming. i guess we are becoming in east hampton institution. i want to thank our underwriters. [applause] are the sponsors, but our family and the tub group and if local agent and then many of you and others who are not here on this gorgeous day, who has been faithful underwriters and sponsors and fellows of the program for three years. i want to think specifically who i gather us
. >> later in the book, the real romney, "boston globe" investigator michael crane-ish blue billick, michigan truth his years at bain capital. part of our booktv weekend on c-span 2. >> author and human rights activists, kati marton is joined by 2011 peace prize winner, said seven and a dina powell come in the global head of corporate engagement from goldman sachs. posted by the hamptons institute and the roosevelt institute, this is an hour and 15 minutes. >> the...
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114
Apr 14, 2012
04/12
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eye 114
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but that didn't exactly make the front page of the "boston globe" because it seems to be a local issue. cross-border kidnappings are exploding particularly in phoenix. there was a controversy because the numbers were pumped up for political reasons but even at two broke again in 2009 there were something like 260 kidnapping strictly related to the drug war, just a couple of hours away from here and it's not limited again, to the border region. in 2008 a 6-year-old child was kidnapped at gunpoint from his home because his grandfather wrote the drug cartel money. i had this great urge to write a book that explained it in very plain language to people who really wanted to know more but didn't want to drill into a lot of details about why it's happening and why they should care and why they should become, most importantly why it should become a national priority is supposed to just a side thing in folk saying that order is safer and more secure than it's ever been. i think we need to re-examine that, and that is what the book is about. >> thanks cilia. r. next up there is the very distingu
but that didn't exactly make the front page of the "boston globe" because it seems to be a local issue. cross-border kidnappings are exploding particularly in phoenix. there was a controversy because the numbers were pumped up for political reasons but even at two broke again in 2009 there were something like 260 kidnapping strictly related to the drug war, just a couple of hours away from here and it's not limited again, to the border region. in 2008 a 6-year-old child was kidnapped...
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Oct 20, 2012
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we will feature, this man do leave now the head of the american chemistry council and the boston consulting group and tom peterson at the climate strategies each of which has recent reports on the importance of the subject. i want to thank you the supporters to make the program manufacturing program here possible. these include the apollo group, madison capital partners, manufacturing institute innovation the national association of manufacturers, national science foundation, to leo the motor, u.s. chamber of commerce and william but danger. today's program explores the policies needed to strike the u.s. manufacturing in the near term. i note that the topic of manufacturing was mentioned 15 times in tuesday's presidential debate and the two panelists are fully able to elaborate on the candidates' positions but also their deep knowledge of the subject. our partner for this event is the conference on the renaissance of american manufacturers, manufacturing headed by gilbert kaplan. like i am, he is an alumnus of the international trade administration at the commerce department. unlike me he's
we will feature, this man do leave now the head of the american chemistry council and the boston consulting group and tom peterson at the climate strategies each of which has recent reports on the importance of the subject. i want to thank you the supporters to make the program manufacturing program here possible. these include the apollo group, madison capital partners, manufacturing institute innovation the national association of manufacturers, national science foundation, to leo the motor,...